Respiratory ventilating device
Abstract
A surgical device is disclosed which enables selective ventilation of the
lungs of a patient. The device is inserted into the patient's respiratory
passages and is employed in conjunction with a conventional breathing
circuit which allows ventilation of either lung alone or both lungs
simultaneously by pumping life supporting gases, typically including
anesthetic agents, through the tube during surgery. The device comprises
an elongated flexible tube split at its proximal end into left and right
tubular extensions and having a curved distal end adapted to be inserted
via the patient's mouth through the trachea into the left main stem
bronchus. Inflatable cuffs surrounding the tube permit the lungs to be
isolated from each other and from the atmosphere. The interior of the tube
is divided into left and right passageways by a septum, which is arranged
such that the left lung can be ventilated through the left tubular
extension, the left passageway and an orifice at the distal end of the
tube, and the right lung can be ventilated through the right tubular
extension, the right passageway and an orifice in the side of the tube
between the cuffs. The septum comprises a thin flexible membrane having a
transverse dimension roughly equal to one-half the circumference of the
tube's interior surface, whereby externally applied differential pressures
will cause the membrane to position itself along one side of the tube to
permit utilization of virtually the entire cross-sectional area within the
tube for ventilating the lung corresponding to the higher of the two
externally applied pressures. Both lungs can be simultaneously ventilated
using equal externally applied pressures which cause the septum membrane
to return to a center position, thus providing half the cross-sectional
area for each of the two passageways.
| Inventors: |
Walling; Peter T. (Dallas, TX) |
| Appl. No.:
|
05/920,723 |
| Filed:
|
June 30, 1978 |